RE-Watch of High Speed / Slow Motion Fashion Shoot with Superfad on Chase Jarvis LIVE

3 weeks ago, I put the $150,000 Phantom Flex camera through its paces during an experimental fashion shoot with my good friend, director Will Hyde from Superfad. We had an absolute blast. We also had superhot female talent, an epic wardrobe, do-it-yourself solutions mixed with the highest end pro gear, and more than 50,000 watts of light. While the shoot went on for 6 hours, this here re-watch has been trimmed to include all the highlights for your viewing pleasure.

Excellent blog! Do you have any recommendations for aspiring writers? I’m hoping to start my own blog soon but I’m a little lost on everything. Would you advise starting with a free platform like WordPress or go for a paid option? There are so many choices out there that I’m completely confused .. Any ideas? Cheers!| bewerbungsfotos München USA visum fotos http://www.fotostudioaugenblicke.de

Write more, thats all I have to say. Literally, it seems as though you relied on the video to make your point. You obviously know what youre talking about, why throw away your intelligence on just posting videos to your site when you could be giving us something enlightening to read?| dr oz cambogia http://www.pure-garcinia-cambogia.org

Thanks for the marvelous posting! I genuinely enjoyed reading it, you can be a great author.I will be sure to bookmark your blog and will often come back at some point. I want to encourage that you continue your great posts, have a nice weekend!|

Thank you for every other wonderful article. The place else may anyone get that type of information in such a perfect method of writing? I have a presentation subsequent week, and I’m on the search for such information.|

Thank you a bunch for sharing this with all of us you actually recognise what you are talking about! Bookmarked. Kindly also visit my site =). We may have a hyperlink change contract between us| book cheap flight http://www.funtraveldeals.com/book-flights/

I’ll be watching it later this week again as I can’t get enough of high speed filming. I prefer these kind of videos and loved every single minute of it. Sorry second. Awesome production and as some others i can’t wait to see the final product thinking of how it was made.

Hey Chase, I’ve been following your stuff for some time and have to say videos like this are amazing and incredibly insightful. Many of us will never get the opportunity to work the way you do but to get a taster of how the pros work is fascinating, not only to understand how much goes into such work but also to realise that to get some of the best shots or footage it’s necessary to go beyond the initial thought process.

But why did you say “Share if you dig it.”? Sorry, but that’s a real Captain Obvious moment on your part. I mean, as an audience we know the internet well enough to make it here, we probably know how to send our friends too if its cool enough. You’re the hottest stuff in photog right now and you do awesome work. Let it speak for itself without pimping shares. Just IMHO. Again, great work.

Hey Chase, the next time you need to break tungsten bulbs just use water. A single drop of cold water on a hot bulb will cause failure (a fact I learned at a tender age). Plus, I think a water droplet entering the frame at 1000+ frames per second would look awesome.

Hey Chase. This is coming at you from Liverpool, UK….My good friend, John Scotland put me onto your live shows and blog. This is great stuff. I’d heard of phantom cameras but never studied one in action. Whata beast. I particularly loved the symbiosis of a hundred grand camera with a 50 dollar garage built light…awesome. I have scratch built lights before using very humble materials and gotten great results from them.

Just wondering if you could get a schematic for the light featured and share it if the very talented chap who built it is willing to share it with the world. It would be great to know how the batteries are connected and how to build in the safety fuses too. I would love to make one of these!

For those not accustomed to such productions I think the most interesting to watch should be everything that goes on BTS and the amount of people required for this kind of work. And that’s on production day alone, much more happens during pre-production, which can take even weeks.

BTW Jarvis, I think you touched the model too much, which is quite unprofessional. Only the MUA and Stylist are allowed that. You can give her a big hug at the wrap-up though.

thank henry. good point about the gear. but i’ve never once it 15 years of doing this been criticized by connecting with the models in the way i do. so – fair of you to voice your opinion – but the feedback i’ve had over thousands of interactions runs contrary to your point here.

Well, I was half joking, but this is a VERY serius matter often overlooked, specially by younger pals entering the biz. I have to say I almost cringed when you touched her belly when she was dressing the “pearl dress”. As for my experience, this ‘might’ have got you into trouble later if the model raised any complaints to her agency, specially if you did that more through the shoot, even unintentionally. Even touching a model just to show her how to move or act is a no-no. Despite good karmas and relaxed atmospheres, work is work and you have to remain professional, the producer, AD or client could get the wrong impression. After work, you can take the models and the entire team to the disco and party all night no problemo.
Anyway, great work and thank you very much, you’ve inspired me and i’ll soon do some cool and extravagant fashion-related stuff on my dime (for portfolio/marketing).

According to whom, Henry? You must not work in the creative industry. Human interactions are NOT unprofessional, it’s part of the job. Chase was not being a creep, Chase was directing. Dancers, actors, models know they would be touched, that’s perfectly normal, it’s perfectly professional. It’s obvious that Chase was not doing it for sexual pleasure but for work. Since I have been on both side of the camera, it is perfectly normal.

If you don’t know anything, it’s better if you don’t say anything and mislead other people with your inaccurate info, probably based on some amateur interactions.